Would NCS help this coin? 1804 Half Cent

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by BigTee44, Sep 21, 2014.

  1. BigTee44

    BigTee44 Well-Known Member

    So there's this 1804 half cent that appears to have AU details, with what appears to be corrosion to the left of the date.

    Would NCS be able to make this a problem free coin? I don't think it's been cleaned previously?

    I have verdi-care that I think would work on this, but I don't want to clean the coin and then find out it comes back cleaned when I could have sent it to them and actually receive a numbered grade.

    What are your thoughts? Would NCS help, is it XF/AU?

    1804-1.JPG 1804-2.JPG 1804-3.JPG
     
    jello likes this.
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    I'd talk to NCS, first, and find out if you can specify whether or not to cancel the conservation if, in their opinion, it would not receive a problem-free grade. At worst, you would only be required to pay the examination fee if it could not get a problem-free grade.

    Chris
     
    jello likes this.
  4. ToughCOINS

    ToughCOINS Dealer Member Moderator

    I think the amount of perfect color you have speaks to keeping the coin as-is. While some coins warrant conservation, I think this piece could be screwed up in efforts to lighten the darker areas.
     
    green18 and medoraman like this.
  5. Kentucky

    Kentucky Supporter! Supporter

    The purpose of verdicare is not to lighten the color but to combat and remove any verdigris. With this in mind, I would treat the obverse of the coin, since, as far as I know, verdicare will not trigger anything that would lead to a determination as "cleaned". Perhaps Thad could address this.
     
  6. geekpryde

    geekpryde Husband and Father Moderator

    Conserving copper is quite tricky I hear. the coin already seems to have an odd color, but I don't know much about EAC. don't forget, PCGS now conserves coins too.
     
  7. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I don't feel this coin is a good choice to have work done on it.
    I would leave it the way it is.
     
    green18 likes this.
  8. BigTee44

    BigTee44 Well-Known Member

    do you agree with my grading of the coin?

    The seller is asking $450 obo, but if it doesn't grade clean, I don't think it'd be a good buy.
     
  9. aubade21

    aubade21 Well-Known Member

    I can't tell from your picture, but with copper, it's important to know whether the issue is ON the coin or IN the coin. If the problem you're looking at is on the surface, you might have a chance of improving the coin with proper conservation. However, there are many issues that have already done damage to the surface over the past 200 years, and conservation will leave behind obvious signs of the former issue. As a side note, removing discoloration (I.e. carbon spots) on copper coins is nearly impossible, unless you plan to strip the coin and recolor it, which I don't recommend.
     
  10. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    For about $500 you can find something without a problem.
     
    Travlntiques, jello and BigTee44 like this.
  11. phankins11

    phankins11 Well-Known Member

    That'd go in my 7070 just fine as is :) sorry I don't have anything better to add to the conversation than that [emoji14]
     
  12. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    I would call it XF-40, but the color is questionable and the strike is quite weak. I like the work that NCS can do except on copper coins. They never look natural and always look cleaned even if the coin receives a numerical grade. At the price, I would pass on this one.
     
    green18 likes this.
  13. ldhair

    ldhair Clean Supporter

    I don't question the color at all.
     
  14. Travlntiques

    Travlntiques Well-Known Member

    Looks a bit like my old one....which I bought for around $150 this year.
    I don't think the strike is all that weak, but the color is odd to my eyes (could be the camera though). It's very common for these to be cleaned and re-colored and while 1804 is a cool date, it's the most common for this design. At that price point & raw, I wouldn't buy it, the odds of it coming back "details" are just too great.
     

    Attached Files:

    BigTee44 likes this.
  15. Cringely

    Cringely Active Member

    BigTee44,

    If you are going to get involved with early copper, you should join EAC http://www.eacs.org. For grading early copper, they publish http://www.eacs.org/GradingGuide/GradingGuide.html (at a reasonable price) that every copper collector should have.
    Using EAC standards, I'd guess the details grade to be VF-20 (possible VF-30, but I'd need better images).
    To determine price, I'd need to determine its Cohen (variety) number.
    Can you post sharper images of both obverse and reverse?
     
    BigTee44 likes this.
  16. LostDutchman

    LostDutchman Under Staffed & Overly Motivated Supporter

    Yeah, I'd pass at anywhere near that price. That corrosion is a killer.
     
  17. jello

    jello Not Expert★NormL®

    Buy a Graded one.You will save a lot of headaches:)
     
  18. Cringely

    Cringely Active Member

    Cohen variety can make a huge difference in price. Does the reverse have stems? Cohen-2 and Cohen-4's (both quite rare) will run in the 10's of thousands of dollars in grades of VF, even with that (what appears to be to be) carbon spotting
     
  19. BigTee44

    BigTee44 Well-Known Member

    It appears to be the crosslett 4 and stems on the reverse.
     
  20. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    Sorry, BT, I didn't read your original post carefully enough. I was under the impression you already owned it. With the condition factor and what the seller wants for it, I would pass.

    Chris
     
  21. Kirkuleez

    Kirkuleez 80 proof

    You could be right, but it has that old Tarn-X flat look to me. Of course the images may have something to do with that.
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page